All grebes belong to the Podicipedidae family: podex/podicis = anus/vent, and pedis/pes = foot; hence Grebes are ‘bumfoot’ birds. Well, not quite. The description refers to how their feet are set way back on their bodies. This gives grebes the maximum power for swimming and diving – perhaps the ‘outboard motor’ bird would be more apt.
The Australasian Grebe is Tachybaptus novaehollandiae: Tachys = fast, bapto = dip, novaehollandiae = New Holland, the old name for Australia, and so we get ‘the Australian fast dipper’.
Australasian Grebes usually tend to prefer smaller, freshwater bodies such as farm dams, wetlands, sewerage ponds, etc. Their close cousin, the Hoary-headed Grebe (the two are often seen together) seems to opt for more open waters, fresh and saline.
The Australasian Grebe feeds on small fish and crustaceans, water snails and insects. They get their diet by diving to a depth of 2 or 3 metres, or by chasing their prey on the surface. Australasian Grebes are regarded as very poor fliers. If they are disturbed by an intruding photographer, they often dive and resurface several metres away rather than swim or fly to shelter.
It is often reported that Australasian Grebes eat their own feathers, even feeding them to their young. Although not proven, it is thought to be a means of lining their stomachs to prevent sharp bones entering their intestines.
Aussie grebes often build their nests on an island of floating vegetation. The parents are sometimes known to carry their young on their backs – I haven’t lived long enough yet to see this.
And finally, Australasian Grebes have two distinct phases of plumage. All images on this page are of T.novaehollandiae in the breeding phase. When non-breeding, Australasian Grebes are very similar to their hoary-headed relative.
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